PERENNIALS 
PRICES (except as otherwise noted): 50¢ each. 
Write for special quantity prices. 
Achillea filipendulina. — Cloth of Gold Yarrow. 
A splendid plant for hot, dry, sunny locations. The 
pale yellow flowers grow on 18 inch stems which 
are produced in great profusion from June until the 
end of September. A good cut flower and a fine 
border plant. 
A. ptarmica — Sneezewort Yarrow. 
hort. var. The Pearl. Full, perfect white flower, 
excellent for cutting. A satisfactory border plant. 
Alyssum saxatile — Basket of Gold. 
Tiny golden flowers in abundance on gray-green 
leaves at tulip-time. To 10 inches. 
Aquilegia canadensis — American Columbine. 
See Wildflowers. 
A. chrysantha — Golden Columbine. 
Clear yellow flowers which continue blooming well 
into the summer. 3 feet. 
A. coerulea — Rocky Mountain Columbine. 
Sky-blue and white, long-spurred blooms. 18 
inches. 65c each. 
A. hybrids. 
Mrs. Scott Elliott Hybrids. Long-spurred flowers 
in many hues of red, yellow, pink, cream, mauve, 
lavender, white and ‘purple on 2 to 2%- foot stems. 
Short spurred hybrids. Quaint flowers in tints and 
shades of blue and rose. Long-lived plants. 18 
inches. 
Snow Queen. Pure white hybrid of the Rocky 
Mountain Columbine. 
Arabis albida — White Rock Cress. 
Pure white flowers produced in dense masses on 
low plants in early spring; splendid for border and 
rockery work. Lasts well when cut. 5 to 10 inches. 
America maritima — Thrift. Sea Pink. 
A gem for rock gardens or edging. Rose-colored 
flowers in one-inch heads rise from low rosettes of 
foliage. 12 inches. 
Asclepias tuberosa — Butterflyweed. 
See Wildflowers. 
Aster novae-angliae — Purple New England Aster. 
Royal purple flowers borne profusely at a height of 
4 feet in September. 
A. novae-angliae roseus — Rosy New England Aster. 
Rose-pink form of the above. 
A. hybrids. 
Beechwood Challenger. Masses of glowing crim- 
son flowers on plants of medium height. 
Mount Everest. Fairly tall, majestic white, bloom- 
ing freely. 
Baptisia australis — Blue Wild Indigo. 
Dark blue sweetpea-like flowers on rounded plants 
in June and July. To 3 feet. Leaves good for 
combining with cut flowers. 
B. leucantha — White Wild Indigo. 
Similar to above, but with white flowers. 
Boltonia latisquama — Violet Boltonia. 
Graceful background plant with delightful mauve- 
pink, star-like flowers in great profusion in late 
summer. To 5 ft. 
10 or more of the same variety at 40¢ each. 
COLUMBINE 
Campanula carpatica — Carpathian Bellflower. 
Blue or white flowers like little bells all summer. 
Compact plants for edging or rockery. June to 
October. 10 to 12 inches. Your choice of color. 
C. persicifolia — Peachbells. Peachleaf Bellflower. 
Bellshaped flowers on tall stalks during June and 
July. Your choice of blue or white. 
C. rotundifolia — Harebells. 
See Wildflowers. 
Centaurea montana — Mountain Bluets. 
Blue ‘‘Bachelor-buttons” throughout the summer. 
12 to 18 inches. 
at ee ONT coccineum — Pyrethrum. Painted 
aisy 
Daisy-like flowers in shades of red, pink, and white 
above fine-cut foliage in June and July. 2 to 3 feet. 
C. maximum. Shasta Daisy. 
Alaska. Handsome plant with large glistening 
white flowers in June and July. 
Esther Reed. Well recognized and universally 
used. Pure white, crested, fully double. 
CHRYSANTHEMUMS — Putney’s Selected Hardy 
"Mums. 60c each, 10 or more of the same variety, 
50c each. Prices are until June Ist only. 
Tall Varieties with Double Flowers 
Alert. Glowing claret-purple. Early. 2%-inch 
blooms on 2-foot stems. 
Algonquin. Most popular yellow. Very hardy 
and early. 18 inches. 
Avalanche — White. Large-flowered, early and 
free-flowering. Snow-white, 3%- inch blooms 
from early September on. 18 inches. 
Avalanche — Yellow. Same as above except that 
flowers are soft yellow with deeper yellow centers. 
